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Feb 2, 2013
02/13
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it is regulated by technology, will which has been done very well. the most regulated industry is financial services. that's not surprising. secondly, government policy created a massive mis-investment in the real estate market and that bubble burst as all bubbles do, destroying trillions of dollars of wealth. also, the institute of wall street is a serious mistake. the mistakes were secondary and in that context, it had an incentive in government policy. almost everything we have done since the financial crisis started since we have been in the short term. it would radically reduce our standard of living in the long-term. even though there is a lot of economic qualities, the real one is philosophical. finally, if we don't change direction economically, united states faces some serious long-term problems. we are doing some very bad things to her children and grandchildren. so what happened? well, we deal too much residential real estate. we go to investing in technology, we should have spent less and save more and borrowed a lot less from foreigners.
it is regulated by technology, will which has been done very well. the most regulated industry is financial services. that's not surprising. secondly, government policy created a massive mis-investment in the real estate market and that bubble burst as all bubbles do, destroying trillions of dollars of wealth. also, the institute of wall street is a serious mistake. the mistakes were secondary and in that context, it had an incentive in government policy. almost everything we have done since...
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Feb 2, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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one of the biggest issues that the court is constantly grappling with is in this age of new technology what is an unreasonable search and seizure? okay matt all right? so we have talked about the government and can they fly over your home and new technologies being used that emanate to your home. we have had questions about wiretaps. we have had questions about gps navigators and tracking devices. and we will have many more. for sure, the forefathers had no idea that the computer and computer chips would exist. even benjamin franklin, i doubt very much that he knew. [laughter] that he ever in his wildest fantasies imagined what we had today. it debuted terms that are more specific than they did, we wouldn't have been given the opportunity to define this so they did a mixture of some very clear things. you can't quarter the militia in people's homes except in times of war. that is pretty specific. but there were many other things they talked about generally. the document gave us a concept. we are guided by that concept. >> what worries you about the constitution? are there any trends th
one of the biggest issues that the court is constantly grappling with is in this age of new technology what is an unreasonable search and seizure? okay matt all right? so we have talked about the government and can they fly over your home and new technologies being used that emanate to your home. we have had questions about wiretaps. we have had questions about gps navigators and tracking devices. and we will have many more. for sure, the forefathers had no idea that the computer and computer...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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the most technologically advanced hospital chain in the country is widely regarded. they had said all technology investments have cost sumartran 25 to $50 million a year. in the rest of the economy i.t. helps you save money you can pass the savings on to a consumer and make a fortune. that's what wal-mart did. it's all about the supply chain. so i think whether the study was right or wrong is irrelevant. it's obvious on its face it is not going to work because and 80 billion-dollar return on the $40 billion doesn't need the government intervention to happen. let's talk about the broad point that i think is important. you are right the life span has gone up and are continuing to go up. but i think as most people in the audience know while some amount of that is attributable to the personal health care, a much greater amount is attributable to public health and it is a far greater amount attributable to the lifestyle. what is interesting about the last 50 years is while the one area that we can definitely are to personal health care has increased the life span of cardi
the most technologically advanced hospital chain in the country is widely regarded. they had said all technology investments have cost sumartran 25 to $50 million a year. in the rest of the economy i.t. helps you save money you can pass the savings on to a consumer and make a fortune. that's what wal-mart did. it's all about the supply chain. so i think whether the study was right or wrong is irrelevant. it's obvious on its face it is not going to work because and 80 billion-dollar return on...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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they don't respect the technology. they respect him once since come but think how you feel if you need to return to w. it they could shoot. you would present this omnipresent, lethal entity that can just reach in. so there is a cultural part we need to understand the really creates resentment on people. the other thing i worry even more is the threshold. quÉbec in 1998. president clinton who launched tomahawk missiles based on the intelligence from the embassies brought up in east africa in a lunchtime hot missiles in sudan to afghanistan and they hit targets. if you have tenuous in the next term the next morning for work, all of us would've said no. we fired some tomahawk missiles were not a word. if u.s. people near the impact of this tomahawk missiles, they'd have a different view. so the dangerous it can can lower the willingness to use force cannot think of it is water and yet you build up people at war with you. when did al qaeda go to war with united states? the average answer is 9/11. al qaeda declared war aga
they don't respect the technology. they respect him once since come but think how you feel if you need to return to w. it they could shoot. you would present this omnipresent, lethal entity that can just reach in. so there is a cultural part we need to understand the really creates resentment on people. the other thing i worry even more is the threshold. quÉbec in 1998. president clinton who launched tomahawk missiles based on the intelligence from the embassies brought up in east africa in a...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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that will create an enhanced e-book and use that technology to invite large numbers of students to take part and send in questions in question each other and get to know each other using the web. there are a lot of newfangled items going around about how this is presented. i am struggling to catch up with myself. i instructed me how to it to beat and twitter and facebook and all these other things. a lot of things like the enhanced e-book i can't do because i don't have an ipad. i do believe in the possibility of the media. if you're trying to a tell a legitimate story you need to take every resource, every chance you can to make connections. that is the novelty side of what i am presenting here and i'm interested in what you guys think about this, even the notion of repeating some source or using some of the language. states things together. the let me talk a little bit about ms. marin -- misremembering an hour and balanced sense of history, the urgency that i think it lies in this subject. while i want to do it, take this risk to try to make another connection with you. we have inaugu
that will create an enhanced e-book and use that technology to invite large numbers of students to take part and send in questions in question each other and get to know each other using the web. there are a lot of newfangled items going around about how this is presented. i am struggling to catch up with myself. i instructed me how to it to beat and twitter and facebook and all these other things. a lot of things like the enhanced e-book i can't do because i don't have an ipad. i do believe in...
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Feb 5, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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let's say is high skill on behalf of the folks working in high technology companies etc.. we are a decent generous country and don't wanted to be all those guys. we want some component of the humanitarian as well. why not target the 60 poorest most highly indebted countries in world. with that zambia rather than new mexico. mexico is a relatively affluent country growing quite rapidly right now. that is why net migration from mexico is roughly zero. that is one of the realities, immigration has changed. let's construct a program oriented toward those countries so those people can send remittance back home and it is going to be structured to have up flow so people who want to go back is easy for them to do so in the the people can take care slots. that is a more coherent way to think about humanitarian because those remittances will vastly overweight assistance by the united states or any other country. we are being backed into a corner, we are being backed into this idea that the immigration agenda advanced on political grounds, we mentioned 10% of the population is foreig
let's say is high skill on behalf of the folks working in high technology companies etc.. we are a decent generous country and don't wanted to be all those guys. we want some component of the humanitarian as well. why not target the 60 poorest most highly indebted countries in world. with that zambia rather than new mexico. mexico is a relatively affluent country growing quite rapidly right now. that is why net migration from mexico is roughly zero. that is one of the realities, immigration has...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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WHUT
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this is the technology of tomorrow. tavis could get that shoe -- tavis: get that shoe. >> bid is at a museum of art. lightweight. biodegradable. but my passion is about how can we change the things that we design and manufacture such that we can bring jobs back to our country and to have greener technology. less of a carbon footprint. i think this is the next big thing. tavis: i think i get it, and i think the audience gets it now, but when you named this book, what were you thinking? >> whether or not on to a partnership or a country being divided or a business going through a difficult environment, we need this assistance and how we live. tavis: i have been to china and have had the honor many times. my very first trip, i was taken by a friend of mine, and after spending a week or two in china, i learned so much. it the last day of the trip, we rescinding and waiting on a plane to take off. traveling between beijing and shanghai, and i did not realize that she had grown up in that cultural revolution. and after being
this is the technology of tomorrow. tavis could get that shoe -- tavis: get that shoe. >> bid is at a museum of art. lightweight. biodegradable. but my passion is about how can we change the things that we design and manufacture such that we can bring jobs back to our country and to have greener technology. less of a carbon footprint. i think this is the next big thing. tavis: i think i get it, and i think the audience gets it now, but when you named this book, what were you thinking?...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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so, i'm going to be at the mercy of technology here and see if i can get this to work. one of the first things i did when researching this book was to look at washington, d.c. as a whole. for years and years and years, washington, d.c. was a majority african-american city. i think the numbers are changing right now. but for a long time, washington, d.c. was an african-american majority city. so the question came to me. there are hundreds of statues in the city limits of washington, d.c. sitting on public property. some of these statutes had to be of african-americans i just knew. so i started looking around the city and trying to find out how many statues are there of real african-americans on public land in washington, d.c.? now, i want to be specific about what i am talking about. i am talking about statues of real african-americans, not models. for example, there are statues of african-americans in the korean war memorial. however, these are models. these are statues meant to represent all african americans who fought in the korean war. no one can look at this pictur
so, i'm going to be at the mercy of technology here and see if i can get this to work. one of the first things i did when researching this book was to look at washington, d.c. as a whole. for years and years and years, washington, d.c. was a majority african-american city. i think the numbers are changing right now. but for a long time, washington, d.c. was an african-american majority city. so the question came to me. there are hundreds of statues in the city limits of washington, d.c. sitting...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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in 2001 scott bernstein at the center for neighborhood technology in chicago said what happens if instead of measuring co2 per mile, we start measuring per person or per household? because there are only a certain number of us, and we can choose toly in places where we -- to live in places where we pollute more or less. if you look at per household, the red and green flip, and by far the healthiest place you can live is in the city. manhattanites use a third of the electricity of people in dallas. why? well, they're heating and cooling their neighbors, right? their apartments are touching. but even more importantly than that is the less driving they're doing. transportation is the greatest single contributor to, um, most civilians' greenhouse gas. you know, in our daily lives the biggest choice we can make, you know, when i built my house in washington, d.c., i cleaned the shelves on the solar water heater, i got the super insulation, i got the bamboo flooring, i have a wood burning stove that supposedly a log burn anything my wood burning stove contributes less co2 to the environment tha
in 2001 scott bernstein at the center for neighborhood technology in chicago said what happens if instead of measuring co2 per mile, we start measuring per person or per household? because there are only a certain number of us, and we can choose toly in places where we -- to live in places where we pollute more or less. if you look at per household, the red and green flip, and by far the healthiest place you can live is in the city. manhattanites use a third of the electricity of people in...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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FOXNEWS
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a collection of innovations designed around a bed with dualair technology that allows you to adjust to the support your body needs - each of your bodies. our sleep professionals will help you find your sleep number setting. exclusively at a sleep number store. sleep number. comfort ... individualized. at the ultimate sleep number event, queen mattresses start at just $599 . and save 50% on our innovative limited edition bed. [ male announcer ] when you wear dentures you may not know it, but your mouth is under attack. food particles infiltrate and bacteria proliferate. ♪ protect your mouth, with fixodent. the adhesive helps create a food seal defense for a clean mouth and kills bacteria for fresh breath. ♪ fixodent, and forget it. ♪ ♪ call 911 shorty on the dance floor, whoa ♪ >> judge jeanine: one milwaukee sheriff is making a bold statement about 911 not being your best option. take a listen. >> with officers laid off and 911oughed simply calling and waiting is no longer your best option. beg for mercy, hide under the bed or fight back but are you prepared? consider taking
a collection of innovations designed around a bed with dualair technology that allows you to adjust to the support your body needs - each of your bodies. our sleep professionals will help you find your sleep number setting. exclusively at a sleep number store. sleep number. comfort ... individualized. at the ultimate sleep number event, queen mattresses start at just $599 . and save 50% on our innovative limited edition bed. [ male announcer ] when you wear dentures you may not know it, but...
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the house is brimming with aging services technologies. it's a 5,000-square-foot peek into the future. - each year, we invite a number of technology companies and products that are innovative. and we try to, as much as we can, to get them over the imagination hump. - now see if you can get over this hump-- a headset that's designed to literally read your mind. the technology involves sending your brainwaves to a computer. - the headset i'm wearing is designed to pick up my eeg waves, which then will be associated with the movements on screen. - that prompts the computer to take the specific action you were thinking about without so much as a keystroke or a mouse click. that's chris krause with the headset. on the right is jack york, president of the company. - what i have it trained to do is a few basic commands, like, for example, trying to think the command to lift the cube... which would then be associated with specific keystrokes for me to be able to navigate through the computer system. - chris, can you make it go left? can you make i
the house is brimming with aging services technologies. it's a 5,000-square-foot peek into the future. - each year, we invite a number of technology companies and products that are innovative. and we try to, as much as we can, to get them over the imagination hump. - now see if you can get over this hump-- a headset that's designed to literally read your mind. the technology involves sending your brainwaves to a computer. - the headset i'm wearing is designed to pick up my eeg waves, which then...
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Feb 7, 2013
02/13
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MSNBCW
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textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. with investment information, risks, fees and expenses and you wouldn't have it any other way.e. but your erectile dysfunction - you know, that could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as this may cause an unsafe
textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. with investment information, risks, fees and expenses and you wouldn't have...
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220
Feb 8, 2013
02/13
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KPIX
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but i think job descriptions have to change as technology is adapted. >> you think people deserve to be paid for answering a telephone call? >> yes. i mean, depending on the length of the call. >> if it's a five minute interruption, i think it would be foolhardy of an employee to expect to have overtime pay. >> reporter: steven gorski practices employment law and says that technology advances, the courts will probably establish a reasonable standard for how much the office can contact people on their off hours without paying them but a judge has allowed other officers to join in the chicago lawsuit and that could end up costing the city millions of dollars in back pay. what would the ramifications be for this to anybody who wants to pick up the phone and call their employee on the day off? >> i think they will think twice. before they hire them they will give a full description. this is your job description. you will be paid 9 to 5 when you come in but you will be expected to answer a brief phone call. >> reporter: but there could be an upside for employees. >> probably wouldn't get
but i think job descriptions have to change as technology is adapted. >> you think people deserve to be paid for answering a telephone call? >> yes. i mean, depending on the length of the call. >> if it's a five minute interruption, i think it would be foolhardy of an employee to expect to have overtime pay. >> reporter: steven gorski practices employment law and says that technology advances, the courts will probably establish a reasonable standard for how much the...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN
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the technology that helps these border patrol agents is absolutely remarkable. the interior enforcement of the united states is coming along and it will continue to be so. 2013 is not 1986. we made another big mistake in 1986. we allow people who had been here for four years, since 1982, in other words by year's worth of people who were here illegally, roughly 50% of the legal resident population, we allowed them to remain and we protected many of their employers. in the legislation, we started in 1987 with a nucleus of about 3 million people who were here illegally and continued to live here it illegally in grew to 11 or 12 million people. we did so by not having a plan for bringing in additional workers when the economy was booming through the 1990's until about 2004-2005. employers took the easy path, employed people who come here illegally. we are doing much better job in terms of employer sanctions. fines have gone up dramatically. all the employers have really skyrocketed. we're going to do much more of this. it is now time to have immigration reform. host
the technology that helps these border patrol agents is absolutely remarkable. the interior enforcement of the united states is coming along and it will continue to be so. 2013 is not 1986. we made another big mistake in 1986. we allow people who had been here for four years, since 1982, in other words by year's worth of people who were here illegally, roughly 50% of the legal resident population, we allowed them to remain and we protected many of their employers. in the legislation, we started...